> The book starts out by wondering why it is so difficult to get climate change into a modern English-language novel that isn't science fiction. It concludes that Western literature has, in the past 200 years or so, become trapped in a world where human comedy and tragedy is separated from nature. Along the way, Ghosh considers the power dynamics that make the climate debate so different in the Eastern than the Western hemisphere.
https://www.dw.com/en/amitav-ghosh-what-the-west-doesnt-get-about-the-climate-crisis/a-50823088
#GunIsland #GreatDerangement #AmitavGhosh
What the West doesn't get about the climate crisis

The new novel by award-winning Indian author Amitav Ghosh, Gun Island, uses climate change as a backdrop. He tells DW about the different perceptions of the climate crisis in the East and West.

Deutsche Welle

In today's installment of "Capitalism is Deranged," water is being drained out of a region teetering on the edge of a deadpool in order to grow alfalfa to feed cattle half way around the world #climatechange #water #greatderangement

https://www.cnn.com/2022/11/05/us/arizona-water-foreign-owned-farms-climate/index.html

@babelcarp Important article! But I felt frustrated not to read of broader views, policies, and models to avoid feeling futile and hopeless. I was enticed by mentions of #RebeccaSolnit and #AmitavGhosh but then left hanging without hints that we can build a #ParadiseInHell and avoid the #GreatDerangement with a decent conception of the #GoodLife that Ghosh says is "mimetic." I guess NYT is limiting, hopefully he'll fill out the promising parts as a book, #RobDietz's #EnoughIsEnough would help!
Earth4All Changes

A comment about Portugal's standard of living from Cornelius Castoriadis keeps coming to mind while reading Naomi Klein's This Changes Everything, Amitav G...

#AmitavGhosh made me senstive how #DavidBahr talks of the #GreenlandIceSheet as a living thing, trying to recover and regulate itself. In #GreatDerangement and #NutmegsCurse Ghosh gets us to see the landscape, mountains, forests.. as makers of meaning,: participants in stories. There are a lot of little mountain shrines in Japan, and sacred little spots by the seas. Maybe we all need a place we choose as a center, and refuse to let it be sold or damaged. Gotta read #BecomingNativeToThisPlace.
> There’s often thought to be a negative relationship between oil and democracy. If you have a lot of oil, if you’re a state that produces a lot of oil, you seem to be undemocratic. What I try to show in the book is there’s a much longer and more interesting history of this relationship between oil and democracy, and that it involves us as much as the countries that depend on the production of oil.
https://www.democracynow.org/2013/10/8/from_caspian_sea_to_arctic_to
#CarbonDemocracy by #TimothyMitchell is quoted in #GreatDerangement
From Caspian Sea to Arctic to Middle East, How Oil Pipelines Threaten Democracy & Planet’s Survival

We spend the hour looking at politics, money and the pursuit of oil, from the series of pipelines originating in the oil-rich Caspian Sea to the deposits in the Arctic Sea where Russia has charged 30 people with piracy for a Greenpeace protest against drilling, to the vast reserves of the Middle East that have fueled conflict for decades. Three guests join us for a roundtable discussion: Anna Galkina, a member of the London-based arts, human rights and environmental justice organization Platform; Platform founder James Marriott, author of “The Oil Road: Journeys from the Caspian Sea to the City of London”; and Timothy Mitchell, Columbia University professor and author of the books “Carbon Democracy: Political Power in the Age of Oil” and “Colonizing Egypt.”

Democracy Now!
> The U.S. military is by some accounts the largest single consumer of petroleum in the world. In 2011, the Department of Defense released, at minimum, 56.6 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent into the atmosphere, more than the U.S.-based operations of ExxonMobil and Shell combined.
#NaomiKlein #ThisChangesEverything is great to read along with #AmitavGhosh. She has me, after #GreatDerangement, re-reading pages of #NutmegsCurse . I ended up reading the books in reverse chronological order.
> The dominant approach in.. [#ClimateEthics] is again posited on rational actors, freely pursuing their own interests. A philosopher of this tradition, in responding to the argument that the moral imperative of climate change comes from the need to save the millions of lives in Asia, Africa, and elsewhere, might well quote #DavidHume: ‘’Tis not contrary to reason to prefer the destruction of the whole world to the scratching of my finger.’
#AmitavGosh's #GreatDerangement and #Western #YangChu
In The #GreatDerangement, #AmitavGhosh quotes U Thant. The above quote is from when I was a one-year old but I have vague memories of the name U Thant... A quick search showed me that my image of him got confused with other images of Asians, or maybe mean comic depictions or something. A quick search shows that the previous post's quote already a meme on #AZquotes, along with another by Buddhist U Thant about everyone deserving respect, like in #Catholic #LaudatoSi by #PopeFrancis: #dignity.
> In 1971.. ‘As we watch the sun go down, evening after evening, through the smog across the poisoned waters of our native earth, we must ask ourselves seriously whether we really wish some future universal historian on another planet to say about us: “With all their genius and with all their skill, they ran out of foresight and air and food and water and ideas,” or, “They went on playing politics until their world collapsed around them.”’ #UThant in The #GreatDerangement